At 08:13 PM 7/29/02 -0700, you wrote:
>begin Stephen M. Helms <smh@silkie.org>
>>
>> Quoting Peter Jay Salzman <p@dirac.org>:
>hi stephen,
>
>i'm pretty sure that's correct, but what i'd like to know is, when
>lilo is on the MBR, does the bootable flag become meaningless?
Yes, meaningless, except if you have a Microsoft OS on the same disk.
If I try to boot to a MS DOS or Windows partition and it does not have the
active (all partitions can be bootable, but only one at a time can be
selected to boot to == active) flag set, I get the "non-bootable or invalid
partition" error. Why not try clearing all the active flags and see what
happens? ;)
My question is, if there is only 400-odd bytes in the MBR for a
bootstrap, and LILO is in it, how does it know which partition the Linux
boot program is on? Does it read which partition in the MBR partition
table (the last 100-odd bytes in the MBR) has the active flag?
Edwin
>
>cfdisk seems to allow you to create multiple bootable partitions (of
>course, i didn't try writing that to disk. maybe cfdisk would pop up an
>error if i did.)
>
>pete
>GPG Fingerprint: B9F1 6CF3 47C4 7CD8 D33E 70A9 A3B9 1945 67EA 951D
>_______________________________________________
>vox-tech mailing list
>vox-tech@lists.lugod.org
>http://lists.lugod.org/mailman/listinfo/vox-tech
>
_______________________________________________
vox-tech mailing list
vox-tech@lists.lugod.org
http://lists.lugod.org/mailman/listinfo/vox-tech